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Why the Bush administration wants war
Statement of the WSWS Editorial Board
14 September 2001
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In the midst of the hysterical war mongering of the US government
and a state-controlled media that knows no shame, it is more than
ever necessary to retain not only ones composure, but also
ones ability to think, analyze, and reason. It is surely
appropriate to mourn the terrible loss of life on September 11.
But sympathy for the victims, their families and friends should
not blind anyone to the fact that powerful sections of the US
ruling elite view this tragedy as a welcome opportunity to implement
a militaristic agenda that has been in the works for more than
a decade.
Modern wars require a pretext, a casus belli that can
be packaged to the public as a sufficient justification for the
resort to arms. Every major war in which the United States has
been involved since its emergence as an imperialist world powerfrom
the Spanish-American War of 1898 to the Balkan War of 1999has
required a catalytic event that inflamed public opinion.
But whatever the nature of such trigger events, they never
proved, in the light of sober historical analysis, to be the real
cause of the wars that followed. Rather, the actual decision to
go to warwhile facilitated by the change in public opinion
produced by the casus belliflowed in each instance
from more essential considerations rooted in the strategic political
and economic interests of the ruling elite.
War, said von Clausewitz in his oft-quoted aphorism,
is the continuation of politics by other means. This
means, in essence, that war is a means by which governments seek
to secure political ends they could not achieve peacefully. There
is no reason to believe that this profound truth does not apply
to the events that are now unfolding in the aftermath of Tuesdays
hijackings and bombings.
The attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon have
been seized on as an opportunity to implement a far-reaching political
agenda for which the most right-wing elements in the ruling elite
have been clamoring for years. Within a day of the attack, before
any light had been shed on the source of the assault or the dimensions
of the plot, the government and the media had launched a coordinated
campaign to declare that America was at war and the American people
had to accept all the consequences of wartime existence.
The policies that are now being advancedan open-ended
expansion of US military action abroad and a crackdown on dissent
at homehave long been in preparation. The US ruling elite
has been hampered in implementing such policies by the lack of
any significant support within the American population and resistance
from its imperialist rivals in Europe and Asia.
Now the Bush administration has decided to exploit the public
mood of shock and revulsion over the events of September 11 to
advance the global economic and strategic aims of American imperialism.
He has the full support of a debased media and a Democratic Party
that is more than happy to end any pretense of opposition to the
Republican right.
On Thursday Bush all but admitted as much, declaring that the
atrocity carried out two days before had provided an opportunity
to wage war against terrorism. He went on to say that the
conduct of this war would be the focus of his entire administration.
Such a declaration of unabashed militarism would have been unthinkable
prior to September 11. But the assault on the World Trade Center
had, in the parlance of imperialist real politik, created
new facts.
Without having begun to seriously investigate, let alone explain,
the very strange circumstances surrounding the terrorist attacks
on New York and Washington, the Bush administration and the media
have declared that all-out war is the only possible response to
these events. This is before the government has even established
the political identity of the terrorists, or answered troubling
questions about how such an elaborate plotapparently involving
dozens of conspirators operating within the United Statescould
have gone completely undetected by the FBI, CIA and associated
intelligence agencies.
Nor have the Federal Aviation Administration, the Air Force
or the FBI explained the failure to issue an alert or attempt
to intercept the hijacked airliners as they swerved off course
and made for the nerve centers of the US financial and military
establishment.
For all the claims of sorrow and sympathy, there could not
have been a more timely or fortuitous event for the Bush administration
than the attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. When
George W. Bush awoke on September 11, he presided over an administration
in deep crisis. Having come to power on the basis of fraud and
the suppression of votes, his government was seen by millions
both in the US and around the world as illegitimate.
The very narrow social base of support his administration had
in the beginning was rapidly eroding in the face of a deepening
economic slump in the US and around the world. Unable to advance
any solution to the growth of unemployment and catastrophic losses
on the stock market, facing criticism over the evaporation of
the budget surplus and the reversal of its pledge not to spend
Social Security funds, the administration was showing signs of
internal dissension and disarray.
Some three weeks before, on August 20, the New York Times
carried a front-page article expressing the fears within ruling
circles that world capitalism was descending into a global recession
of massive proportions. The world economy, the Times
wrote, which grew at a raging pace just last year, has
slowed to a crawl as the United States, Europe, Japan and some
major developing countries undergo a rare simultaneous slump.
The Times continued: The latest economic statistics
from around the globe show that many regional economic powersItaly
and Germany, Mexico and Brazil, Japan and Singaporehave
become economically stagnant, defying expectations that growth
in other countries would help compensate for the slowdown in the
United States.... [M]any experts say the world is experiencing
economic whiplash, with growth rates retreating more quickly and
in more of the leading economies than at any time since the oil
shock of 1973. And this time there is no single factor to account
for the widespread weakness, persuading some economists that recovery
may be slow in coming.
We have gone from boom to bust faster than any
time since the oil shock, said Stephen S. Roach, the chief
economist of Morgan Stanley, a New York investment bank. When
you screech to a halt like that, it feels like getting thrown
through the windshield.
The Times derisively described the response of the Bush
administration to the unfolding crisis: The Bush administration
still puts a relatively bright gloss on the picture. It
reported with unconcealed skepticism the White House projection
of a sharp upturn in the US economy later this year or in early
2002.
On the same day the Times reported that Ford Motor Co.
was preparing to announce more layoffs and quoted CEO Jacques
Nasser as saying, We dont see any factor thats
going to restore the robustness of the economy in the next
12 to 18 months.
The Wall Street Journal provided an equally gloomy assessment,
writing: Almost a year after the slump in high tech and
manufacturing began, many of the other pillars that have been
supporting the economy are starting to weaken. Businesses that
started slashing spending on equipment and software late last
year are now doing the same on office and industrial real estate...
Automobile sales, which were surprisingly healthy most
of this year thanks to generous incentives and low interest rates,
have started to slide.... Since April, most industry groups tracked
by the Labor Department have been reducing payrolls.... Construction
shaved 61,000 jobs between March and July, the clearest example
of the spillover from high tech and manufacturing.
The mood of gloom within business circles turned to near panic
last Friday when the Labor Departments jobless report for
August showed a sharp rise in the unemployment rate, from 4.5
percent to 4.9 percent in a single month. Nearly one million jobs
were wiped out in August, as job cuts hit every sector of the
economy. Faced with the prospect of a collapse in consumer spending,
investors rushed to dump their stock holdings. The Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 230 points, ending the day well below the 10,000
mark.
The economic crisis compounded a host of foreign policy dilemmas
confronting the Bush administration. Washingtons policy
in Iraq was in a shambles, with sanctions crumbling and the US
facing open opposition from France, Germany, Russia and China
to its plans for maintaining sanctions and intensifying its vendetta
against Saddam Hussein. On this and other major issues the US
was finding itself unable to get resolutions through the United
Nations Security Council and other international bodies. On a
whole host of issuesmissile defense, global warming, an
international criminal courtthe US was in open conflict
with most of its nominal allies.
The growth of social protest and anti-capitalist sentiment
was expressed in the wave of anti-globalization demonstrations,
which revealed the extreme isolation of the governments of all
the major powers and rising popular discontent over their right-wing
policies, seen to be embodied above all in the Bush administration.
But in the aftermath of the September 11 terror attack the
Bush administration, aided by a cynical and sophisticated media
campaign, has been working to whip up a patriotic war fever that
will enable it to overcome, at least temporarily, its immediate
problems, while creating the conditions for profound and lasting
changes on both the foreign and domestic front.
In the name of national unity, the Democratic Party has given
Bush a blank check to wage war, increase military spending and
curtail civil liberties. As one commentator aptly put it, We
will be operating as if we have a national unity party. That means
alternative voices will be suppressed.
The Washington Post spoke for the liberal establishment
in a September 14 editorial calling for the curtailment of democratic
and civil rights. Entitled New Rules, the editorial
declared: [I]f replying to that attack is truly to become
an organizing principle of US policy, as we believe it shouldif
the United States is to undertake the difficult and sustained
campaign against those who threaten itthen neither politics
nor diplomacy can return to where they were.... This is most of
all true as Congress and others discuss the possible need to sacrifice
privacy, freedom of movement or other liberties to the needs of
domestic security.
Tens of billions of dollars will be pumped into the economy
in the form of military and security spending, and to rebuild
the devastated sections of New York City. The viability of what
remains of the social safety netMedicare and Social Securitywill
not be allowed to stand in the way of pursuing the twilight struggle
of good versus evil proclaimed by the White House and Congress.
Every restriction on the exercise of US military might and
the counterrevolutionary activities of the CIA will be lifted.
For years the most reactionary sections of the ruling elite, in
the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal and the
publications of right-wing think tanks, have been agitating for
an end to the Vietnam syndrome and calling for the
unbridled use of military force to secure the interests of US
imperialism. Now they see the opportunity to realize their agenda.
Already leading spokesmen of both parties are demanding the
rescinding of the presidential order banning the use of assassinations
as a tool of foreign policy. The Democrats have agreed to vote
for a resolution giving the White House virtually unlimited authority
to go to war against any nation that it claims is aiding or encouraging
terrorists. There is little doubt that one of the first targets
for a massive bombing campaign, combined with a ground invasion,
will be Iraq. But other countries are certain to follow.
As one military officer said on Wednesday, The constraints
have been lifted. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said
the contemplated military action will not be restricted
to a single entity, state or non-state entity. Georgia Democrat
Zell Miller was more blunt in expressing the bloodlust that prevails
in government circles: Bomb the hell out of them. If theres
collateral damage, so be it.
Senator John McCain said the US should not rule out any
force short of nuclear weapons. New York Times columnist
Thomas Friedman, in a piece entitled World War III,
refused to make such a caveat, writing that while the September
11 attack may have been the first major battle of World
War III, it may be the last one that involves only conventional,
non-nuclear weapons.
The American people, at a moment of enormous grief and anxiety,
are being told they must accept the prospect of having their sons
and daughters sent to distant parts to kill and be killed, to
fight an enemy or enemies yet to be named, and at the same time
acquiesce to the gutting of their democratic rights.
What they are not being told is that the American corporate
and financial elite, in the name of a holy war against terrorism,
intends to rain death and destruction on countless thousands of
people in order to realize global aims it has long harbored. Can
there be any doubt that this crusade for peace and
stability will become the occasion for the US to tighten
its grip over the oil and natural gas resources of the Middle
East, the Persian Gulf and the Caspian? Behind the pious and patriotic
declarations of politicians and media commentators stand the long-cherished
designs of American imperialism to dominate new parts of the world
and establish global hegemony.
This article is available as a PDF-formatted
leaflet
See Also:
Arab-Americans and Muslims attacked in
the US
[15 September 2001]
The political roots of the terror attack
on New York and Washington
[13 September 2001]
The political significance of Israels
assassination policy
[7 September 2001]
After the Slaughter:
Political Lessons of the Balkan War
[14 June 1999]
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